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Person- and Place-Selective Neural Substrates for Entity-Specific Semantic Access

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2013

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Oxford University Press (OUP)
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Fairhall, Scott L., Stefano Anzellotti, Silvia Ubaldi, and Alfonso Caramazza. 2013. “Person- and Place-Selective Neural Substrates for Entity-Specific Semantic Access.” Cerebral Cortex 24 (7) (February 20): 1687–1696. doi:10.1093/cercor/bht039.

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Abstract

Object-category has a pronounced effect on the representation of objects in higher level visual cortex. However, the influence of category on semantic/conceptual processes is less well characterized. In the present study, we conduct 2 fMRI experiments to investigate the semantic processing of information specific to individual people and places (entities). First, during picture presentation, we determined which brain regions show category-selective increases during access to entity-specific semantic information (i.e., nationality) in comparison to general-category discrimination (person vs. place). In the second experiment, we presented either words or pictures to assess the independence of entity-specific category-selective semantic representations from the processes used to access those representations. Convergent results from these 2 experiments show that brain regions exhibiting a category-selective increase during entity-specific semantic access are the same as those that show a supramodal (word/picture) category-selective response during the same task. These responses were different from classical “perceptual” category-selective responses and were evident in the medial precuneus for people and in the retrosplenial complex as well as anterior/superior sections of the transverse occipital sulcus and parahippocampal gyrus for places. These results reveal the pervasive influence of object-category in cortical organization, which extends to aspects of semantic knowledge arbitrarily related to physical/perceptual properties.

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concepts, domain, face, semantic, unique entities

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